Title: Biological Anthropology as an Evolutionary Science
1Biological Anthropology as an Evolutionary Science
- Biological anthropology, like other life
sciences, is founded on the mechanisms and
operation of evolution. - Without an appreciation of how evolution
operates, it is difficult to understand how
humans developed and appreciate the diversity of
modern human biology.
2Evolutionary Background
- All life is related, via evolution, to the first
life forms on earth. It is reasonable to believe
that the earth and its physico-chemical makeup
are responsible for the origins and subsequent
evolution of all earthly life. - Evolution represents change though there are
many ways of characterizing this process, here it
will be viewed as descent with modification.
3Evolutionary Background
- Although there is an abundance of evidence
supporting the reality of evolution, there is
still much debate about the precise mechanisms
responsible for evolutionary change, and the
relative importance of these mechanisms in
explaining the diversity and patterning of
earthly life.
4Background to the Emergence of Evolutionary Theory
- The Beginnings of Scientific Geology
- An unchanging world versus a world in constant
change. - Changing views of the origin and development of
the planet. - Fossils as time markers.
- Charles Lyell (1797-1875) Uniformitarianism
5The Earth becomes much older
- The action of uniform natural processes on the
topography of the planet - Uniform deposition of sediments and the
relationships to animal fossils. - Seriation of sediments and the visualization of
earth history. - Attempts at absolute dating of the origins of the
planet.
6Linnaeus Bringing Order to the Living World
- Linnaeus (1701-1778), a Swedish botanist.
- the 18th Century, a time of great voyages, with
many new animals and plants introduced in Europe. - A need to systematize nature, to bring order to
the living world. - A need to provide names to animals and plants
that would be universally recognized.
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8The Linnaean System
- A system to bring order to the living world with
the following features - hierarchical placement of animals into a series
of descending categories based on shared
biological features. - use of the Binomial System of nomenclature, with
each animal receiving a genus and species name
(i.e. Homo sapiens).
9Cuvier and Catastrophism
- Baron Georges Cuvier (1769-1832), a French
natural historian, often seen as the founder of
the science of comparative anatomy. - Viewed the living world as having undergone a
series of catastrophes, with each one totally
destroying the previous life forms. - Viewed animal species as fixed and unchanging
over time. - The development of the comparative method in
assessing relationships amongst animals. - The recognition of extinct life.
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14Lamarck The Inheritance of Acquired Characters
- Baron Jean Baptiste de Lamarck (1744-1829), was a
French natural historian. - He recognized the relationship between an
animals biology and its way of life an animal
was adapted to its pattern of existence. - He thought that animals change their biology each
generation as a result of how they interact with
their environment.
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18Charles Darwin the Recognition of Natural
Selection
- Charles Darwin (1809-1882), British natural
historian and co-developer, with Alfred Russell
Wallace (1823-1913), of a theory of evolution
based on the concept of Natural Selection. - Darwin participated in a five year voyage of
exploration during which he made observations of
the natural world which led to his theory of
evolution.
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23The Theory of Evolution
- Darwin presented his theory of evolution, and the
considerable evidence he had amassed to support
it, in The Origin of Species, 1859. - In this book, Darwin avoided all mention of
humans, except for a cryptic sentence on the last
page Much light will be thrown on the origin of
man and his history.
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25 Humans in the Evolutionary World
- In 1863, British anatomist Thomas Henry Huxley
(1825-1895) published his famous defense of
evolution Evidence as to Mans Place in Nature.
Using the comparative gross anatomy of humans and
the African apes (chimpanzees and gorillas), plus
the very few human fossils known at the time,
Huxley documented the evidence for the placing
humans in an evolutionary world. - In 1871, Darwin published The Descent of Man, in
which he too explored the meaning and
implications of human evolution.
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29Criticisms of Darwinian Evolution
- By the time of Darwins death in 1882, The Origin
of Species had gone through six editions, in
which Darwin had attempted to answer the most
serious criticisms of his theory. In spite of
this, by 1900, Darwinian evolution was no longer
seriously considered by most biologists. - Ironically, the most important criticisms, those
dealing with the ways by which hereditary
material is transmitted across generations, and
the origins of new traits, were being answered by
discoveries in the emerging field of genetics.
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31Genetics and Evolution
- The first 30 years of the 20th Century were
marked by the accumulation of enormous amounts of
information about genetic processes. - It was recognized by a number of genetists that
this information provided the missing answers
needed to support Darwinian evolution. - In 1942, Julian Huxley (grandson of Thomas Henry)
published Evolution, The Modern Synthesis, in
which genetic research was utilized with
Darwinian Natural Selection to produce the
Synthetic Theory of Evolution, or Neo-Darwinism.
32Evolution Now
- In 1949, American scientist G. G. Simpson
published The Meaning of Evolution, which
presented the Synthetic Theory of Evolution to a
wide audience. - In 1954, J.D. Watson and F. Crick documented a
model of the structure of the genetic material
DNA, thus providing the basis for the emerging
understanding of the molecular basis for genetic
processes. - Genetic research continues to provide more
information about the mechanisms underlying
evolutionary change.
33Challenges to Current Views of Evolution
- Biologists such as S. J. Gould argue that the
process of evolution is not slow and gradual, as
Darwin had indicated, but operates by rapid
bursts of evolutionary change punctuated by
longer periods of stasis, when little or no
change occurred. - Based on his examination of the fossil record of
shell fish in geological deposits, Charles Lyell
said the same thing to Charles Darwin in the
1840s when Darwin was working on his theory.
34Evolution by Natural Selection
- Founded on three key concepts
- 1. Adaptation
- 2. Reproduction and Mortality
- 3. Variation
35Adaptation
- Animals possess biological attributes that permit
them to follow a specific way of life. - Animal species differ in the sorts of biological
features they possess, and not all herbivorous
mammals for example, have the same kinds of
teeth. - These specific biological features permit animals
to be adapted to the way of life they follow.
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39Reproduction and Mortality
- British naturalist Thomas Malthus (1766-1834) had
observed that although each generation, most
animal species produce huge numbers of sex cells,
fertilized eggs, and young individuals, adult
population numbers remain more or less the same
generation after generation. - Something was killing off the vast majority of
young in these species before they reached
adulthood and sexual maturity.
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41Variation
- Darwin had observed that animals in a population
are not identical in appearance but vary in all
their features. - It is now known that variation is present in all
biological features, from genetic materials to
gross anatomical features like skull shape, size
of the teeth and limb length.
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43Natural Selection
- Darwin argued that in each generation of an
animal population, the immature individuals are
born with biological traits that vary in their
expression. - Those young whose variations permit them to be
better able to survive in the way of life
followed by their species will have a better
chance to survive adulthood, thus reaching sexual
maturity.
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45Natural Selection 2
- By reproducing, these favored individuals pass on
their variations to their offspring. In time,
the species will be characterized by animals with
these traits. - In contrast, those animals whose variations are
not as adaptive will more likely die before
reproductive maturity, and their variations will
slowly be reduced in number in the speciesl.
46Evolution by Natural Selection
- Although Darwin called his theory Survival of
the fittest, most biologists prefer to term it
Reproduction of the fittest because it is clear
that what is important is not that the animal
reach adulthood, but that it reproduce, thus
passing its adaptive variations on to the next
generation.